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ownership of outstanding shares which would eliminate the fiduciary duty
         owed by the majority to the minority.

                                                   ***

         As to Stauffer, we agree that the purpose of § 253 is to provide the parent
         with a means of eliminating minority shareholders in the subsidiary but, as
         we observed in Singer, we did "not read the decision [Stauffer] as
         approving a merger accomplished solely to freeze-out the minority
         without a valid business purpose.” We held that any statement in Stauffer
         inconsistent with the principles restated in Singer was inapplicable to a §
         251 merger. Here we hold that the principles announced in Singer with
         respect to a § 251 merger apply to a § 253 merger. It follows that any
         statement in Stauffer inconsistent with that holding is overruled.

         After Roland, there was not much of Stauffer that safely could be considered good
law. But that changed in 1983, in Weinberger v. UOP, Inc.,11 when the Court dropped the
business purpose test, made appraisal a more adequate remedy, and said that it was
"return[ing] to the well established principles of Stauffer . . . and Schenley . . . mandating
a stockholder’s recourse to the basic remedy of an appraisal.” Weinberger focused on
two subjects — the "unflinching" duty of entire fairness owed by self-dealing fiduciaries,
and the "more liberalized appraisal" it established.

         With respect to entire fairness, the Court explained that the concept includes fair
dealing (how the transaction was timed, initiated, structured, negotiated, disclosed and
approved) and fair price (all elements of value); and that the test for fairness is not
bifurcated. On the subject of appraisal, the Court made several important statements: (i)
courts may consider "proof of value by any techniques or methods which are generally
considered acceptable in the financial community and otherwise admissible in court....;"
(ii) fair value must be based on "all relevant factors," which include not only "elements of
future value . . . which are known or susceptible of proof as of the date of the merger"
but also, when the court finds it appropriate, "damages, resulting from the taking, which
the stockholders sustain as a class;" and (iii) "a plaintiff’s monetary remedy ordinarily
should be confined to the more liberalized appraisal proceeding herein established. . . .”

          11 Del. Supr., 457 A.2d 701 (1983).

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